Whitehall Oil Company v. Eckart

197 So. 2d 664
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1967
Docket1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 197 So. 2d 664 (Whitehall Oil Company v. Eckart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehall Oil Company v. Eckart, 197 So. 2d 664 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

197 So.2d 664 (1966)

WHITEHALL OIL COMPANY, Inc. et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Richard O. ECKART et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 1941.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

March 21, 1966.
Rehearing Denied April 12, 1967.
On Motion to Amend Decree April 12, 1967.
Writ Granted June 9, 1967.

Andrus & Pavy, by Alex L. Andrus, Jr., Morgan J. Goudeau, III, Opelousas, for plaintiffs-appellants-appellees.

*665 Voorhies, Labbe, Fontenot, Leonard & McGlasson, by Bennett J. Voorhies, Lafayette, Pavy & Boudreaux, by A. V. Pavy, Opelousas, Kantrow, Spaht, Weaver & Walter, by Carlos G. Spaht, Baton Rouge, for defendants-appellees-appellants.

Lewis & Lewis, by Seth Lewis, Jr., Boagni & Boagni, by Charles F. Boagni, III, Opelousas, Liskow & Lewis, by William M. Hall, Jr., Lafayette, for plaintiffs-appellees.

En Banc.

TATE, Judge.

This is a concursus proceeding. LSA-C.C.P. Art. 4561 et seq. The owners of a mineral lease deposited a disputed share of an overriding royalty interest into the registry of the court. Two sets of defendants are impleaded to assert claims against this disputed royalty interest. They are opposing groups of the heirs (or their successors) of the late Edward M. Boagni, Sr. We will denote these respective opposing defendants as the Edward-Vincent group and as the Susan-Alice group.

The Edward-Vincent group granted a mineral lease of a tract ("Lot G") then or formerly owned by it. The Susan-Alice group owned a mineral royalty interest affecting this land. By two instruments separate from the lease the mineral lessee also granted the Edward-Vincent group an overriding royalty interest as consideration for their leasing the tract.

The issue of this appeal is whether the Susan-Alice group is entitled to share in the overriding royalty granted to the Edward-Vincent group. The question is whether this overriding royalty interest carved from the mineral lessee's share of production is nevertheless "royalty" within the scope of the mineral royalty interest reserved or granted to the Susan-Alice group when the tract was originally conveyed to a predecessor of the Edward-Vincent group. The interpretation of this original royalty reservation is the principal issue of this litigation.[1]

Facts.

By the partition agreement of November 23, 1942, the heirs of the late Edward M. Boagni each received the title to certain tracts of land, with the other coheirs[2] being reserved or granted a mineral royalty interest affecting the tracts so partitioned. The mineral royalty agreement is set forth as the Appendix to this opinion. The royalty interests created by this instrument have never prescribed, since production ensued before prescription accrued.

The general scheme of the royalty agreement is that the owner who receives the surface title of land in the partition is also reserved or granted a total of 60% of mineral royalties to result from production from it. The other heirs are reserved or granted the remaining 40%, divided in specified proportions for each. The surface owner is granted the exclusive leasing rights and also the right to retain any consideration paid for granting the lease "except royalties".

The disputed royalties result from mineral production from Lot "G" of the lands partitioned. For present purposes, it is not disputed that by the terms of the partition the Edward-Vincent group has, as owners of it, the executive right with regard to Lot *666 "G" (i. e., the exclusive power to grant mineral leases).

On December 13, 1958, the Edward-Vincent group executed a mineral lease of this tract to Craft Thompson. (He subsequently assigned it to the plaintiff Whitehall.) This lease provides that the lessor is to receive royalties of one-eighth (1/8th) of all production.

Simultaneously with execution of the lease, the lessee Thompson executed two instruments which additionally assigned overriding royalty interests to the members of the Edward-Vincent group. The overriding royalty interest so assigned totals 20% (1/5th) of all mineral production to be obtained from Lot "G" under the terms of the lease.[3] This overriding royalty is granted by the lessee to the Edward-Vincent group from the lessee's seven-eighths (7/8ths) share of production which the lessee was to retain under the lease.

Under the terms of the original partition's royalty agreement (see Appendix), the Edward-Vincent group is entitled to receive 71% of royalties from mineral production.[4]

The Susan-Alice group is to receive 29% of the royalties.[5]

The parties all concede that, in accordance with these partition terms, the Susan-Alice group is to receive 29% (and the Edward-Vincent group 71%) of the one-eighth share of production specified by the lease as payable as royalty to the lessor. This litigation concerns whether the Susan-Alice group is entitled also to receive 29% of the additional 20% overriding royalties assigned by the lessee solely to the Edward-Vincent group. The plaintiff mineral-lease owners deposited this 29% (only) of the overriding royalties into court. The proceedings concern only the disputed ownership to this 29%.

Before proceeding to the resolution of the issues of law, we think it fitting to state that we agree with the trial court's decision of the factual issues, namely:

In exercising the executive power to grant the lease and in negotiating for the overriding royalties, Edward M. Boagni, Jr., acted honorably and openly and in accord with what he felt were the contractual rights of the Edward-Vincent parties he represented as agent. He could have accepted for them a cash bonus of $52,000 for the lease, and all parties concede that under the contract the Edward-Vincent group was entitled to keep entirely for themselves any such cash bonus. Instead, he negotiated for the overriding royalty interest at issue, which the lessee granted to the Edward-Vincent group[6] in lieu of the $52,000 cash bonus. This overriding royalty interest was granted as a bonus or consideration for the granting of the lease by the Edward-Vincent group, which had the executive (exclusive leasing) power with regard to the tract leased.

The Original Royalty Reservation Agreement and its Application to the Facts.

The trial court held that there is a distinction between a "lease royalty" and an *667 "overriding royalty". It viewed the former to be the royalty stipulated by the lease and the latter to be royalty created out of the lessee's interest and granted as a bonus or consideration for the execution of the lease. In holding that the Edward-Vincent group was entitled to receive all the overriding royalties, the trial court essentially held that by the terms of the original royalty grant (see Appendix) the "executive"[7] was entitled to receive any consideration or bonus paid for granting the lease, including overriding royalties, and that the "non-participating" royalty owners[8] were entitled to share in royalties in excess of one-eighth only if the lease itself specified that such excess royalty was payable to the lessor.

We respectfully disagree. We feel to be inapplicable the decisions relied upon by the appellees and accepted by the trial court as governing. We view the present question as expressly regulated by the terms of the present royalty agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
197 So. 2d 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehall-oil-company-v-eckart-lactapp-1967.